This year I am teaching Data Science Research Methods (970G5) in autumn semester and Neuroscience of Consciousness (993C8) in the spring.

​The Time Perception Group at Sackler was part of the six-partner EU project Timestorm, which aimed to equip artificial systems with human-like temporal cognition.

More generally, I am interested in how usually coherent perception can result from varying and sometimes incoherent sensory input. My research focuses on human temporal perception. I am also interested in the interaction of temporal perception with conscious experience through phenomenal causality, the sense of agency, and temporal prediction. To investigate these topics, I use a combination of human behavioural, computational modelling, neuroimaging, and artificial systems approaches.

I completed my PhD under the supervision of Dr. Derek Arnold in the Perception Lab at the School of Psychology, The University of Queensland, Australia .

Subsequently, I held a Postdoctoral Researcher position at NTT Communication Science Laboratories in Japan, with Dr. Shin'ya Nishida.